IMDb RATING
6.2/10
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The story of Swiss painter and sculptor Alberto Giacometti.The story of Swiss painter and sculptor Alberto Giacometti.The story of Swiss painter and sculptor Alberto Giacometti.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Laura Bernardeschi
- Café Customer
- (uncredited)
Maja Bloom
- French Girl in the Dream
- (uncredited)
Marina Capasso
- Italian Friend of Giacometti
- (uncredited)
Laetitia Cazaux
- French Prostitute
- (uncredited)
Begoña Fernández Martín
- Graveyard Woman
- (uncredited)
Dolly Jagdeo
- Party Girl
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaLondon doubled for Paris in the film because they couldn't afford to film in Paris. Filming took place over a week and a half and CGI was used to make it look like Paris. According to Tucci, it was cheaper for a small film to use CGI than to visit the real location.
- Quotes
[first lines]
James Lord: [narrating] In 1964, I was a young writer living in Paris. I had written a few articles about Alberto Giacometti, who was one of the most accomplished and respected artists of his generation. I had become good friends with Giacometti and his brother, Diego. And one day, after an exhibition, he asked me to sit for a portrait. He told me it would take no longer than two to three hours. An afternoon at the most.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Conan: Armie Hammer/Nick Swardson (2018)
- SoundtracksJazz à Gogo
Music by Alain Goraguer
Lyrics by Robert Gall
Published by Editions Bagatelle / EMI Music Publishing Ltd
Performed by France Gall
Courtesy of Polydor Records (France)
Under licence from Universal Music Operations Ltd
Featured review
Although in the '60's I knew famous artists could live in hovels, I never imagined the way Alberto Giacometti (Geoffrey Rush), the famous sculptor/painter, lived. In Final Portrait, his grimy Parisian first-floor apartment is strewn with famous spindly-limbed sculptures amid broken pottery and glass with an easel on which he paints a portrait of his friend, James Lord (Armie Hammer).
I am usually critical of stories about painters because these biopics rarely give insight into the artistic process (Girl with a Pearl Earring, Frida, and Pollock among my favorites, but disappointing that way), concentrating rather on the dynamic personal life. However, Final Portrait lets us sit with his subject and ingest the cranky chaos that has already bred world-wide fame.
While his wife Annette Arm (Sylvie Testud), is in attendance, the artist carries on at length with a delightful prostitute, Caroline (Clemence Poesy), goes to dives, disrespects money, chain smokes, and generally acts like the Bohemian he is.
Such seems the stereotype, but writer/director Stanley Tucci deftly adapts Lord's book, A Giacometti Portrait, to let us experience the disarray of the process that takes weeks. The artist is disappointed multiple times, starts over, yet really believes no portrait is ever finished.
Alberto Giacometti keeps us hoping that another day of Lord's sitting will produce a result, yet another day comes and goes into weeks. Lord, a writer, is remarkably patient as we all know genius will not be hurried. When it's over, however, you can bet on its being world-class.
Rush is charming as the disheveled genius, while Hammer is handsome, as always, and subdued in the artist's presence. I was not bored for a second because I felt like a visitor witnessing the workings of chaotic brilliance, a true friendship, and the essence of Parisian artistic life.
Sit back and enjoy an artist at work. It may seem slow, but it's not.
I am usually critical of stories about painters because these biopics rarely give insight into the artistic process (Girl with a Pearl Earring, Frida, and Pollock among my favorites, but disappointing that way), concentrating rather on the dynamic personal life. However, Final Portrait lets us sit with his subject and ingest the cranky chaos that has already bred world-wide fame.
While his wife Annette Arm (Sylvie Testud), is in attendance, the artist carries on at length with a delightful prostitute, Caroline (Clemence Poesy), goes to dives, disrespects money, chain smokes, and generally acts like the Bohemian he is.
Such seems the stereotype, but writer/director Stanley Tucci deftly adapts Lord's book, A Giacometti Portrait, to let us experience the disarray of the process that takes weeks. The artist is disappointed multiple times, starts over, yet really believes no portrait is ever finished.
Alberto Giacometti keeps us hoping that another day of Lord's sitting will produce a result, yet another day comes and goes into weeks. Lord, a writer, is remarkably patient as we all know genius will not be hurried. When it's over, however, you can bet on its being world-class.
Rush is charming as the disheveled genius, while Hammer is handsome, as always, and subdued in the artist's presence. I was not bored for a second because I felt like a visitor witnessing the workings of chaotic brilliance, a true friendship, and the essence of Parisian artistic life.
Sit back and enjoy an artist at work. It may seem slow, but it's not.
- JohnDeSando
- Apr 29, 2018
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Фінальний портрет
- Filming locations
- Ruby's Bar & Lounge, 76 Stoke Newington Road, London, England, UK(old truck and french restaurant scene)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $461,972
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $25,472
- Mar 25, 2018
- Gross worldwide
- $1,677,835
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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